Warren B. Woodson Woodson in 1961 |
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| Born | (1903-02-24)February 24, 1903 Fort Worth, Texas, U.S. |
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| Died | February 22, 1998(1998-02-22) (aged 94) Dallas, Texas, U.S. |
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| 1927–1934 | Texarkana |
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| 1935–1940 | Arkansas State Teachers |
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| 1941–1951 | Hardin–Simmons |
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| 1952–1956 | Arizona |
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| 1958–1967 | New Mexico A&M / State |
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| 1972–1973 | Trinity (TX) |
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| 1935–1941 | Arkansas State Teachers |
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| 1945–1946 | Hardin–Simmons |
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| 1936 | Arkansas State Teachers |
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| 1941–1952 | Hardin–Simmons |
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| 1958–1967 | New Mexico A&M / State |
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| 1968–1973 | Trinity (TX) |
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| Overall | 203–94–14 (college football) 116–50 (college basketball) |
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| Bowls | 6–1–1 |
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Football 4 AIC (1936–1938, 1940) 3 Border (1942, 1946, 1960) |
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College Football Hall of Fame Inducted in 1989 (profile) |
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Warren Brooks Woodson (February 24, 1903 – February 22, 1998) was an American football, basketball, and baseball coach and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Arkansas State Teachers College, now the University of Central Arkansas, (1935–1940), Hardin–Simmons University (1941–1951), the University of Arizona (1952–1956), New Mexico State University (1958–1967), and Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas (1972–1973), compiling a career college football record of 203–94–14 in 31 seasons. He was also the head basketball coach at Arkansas State Teachers from 1935 to 1941 and at Hardin–Simmons in 1945–46, tallying a career college basketball mark of 116–50. Woodson won an additional 52 football games at junior college level and 18 high school football games. He was inducted to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1989.
Education and coaching career
Woodson received a degree from Baylor University in 1924, majoring in Bible and history, and a degree from Springfield College in 1926, majoring in physical education. He coached four sports at Texarkana College from 1927 to 1934 and, in three of the same years also coached three sports at a nearby high school.
He then moved on to Arkansas State Teachers College (now University of Central Arkansas) in Conway from 1935 to 1940. In his second year, his team had a perfect 8–0 season. Won 2000 Elijah Pitts Award (named after the Conway, Arkansas, native and Green Bay Packer legend) for Conway athletic lifetime achievement.
Woodson accepted the head coaching job at Hardin–Simmons University in 1941. During World War II, Woodson served for three years as a lieutenant commander in the United States Navy. The Hardin-Simmons football program was canceled from 1943 to 1945. After Woodson returned, his 1946 team went unbeaten with an 11–0 record. His 1948 team was in three bowls: the Grape Bowl on December 4, a 35–35 tie with College of the Pacific; the Shrine Bowl December 18, a 40–12 victory over Ouachita Baptist; and Camellia Bowl December 30, a 49–12 victory over Wichita.
Woodson coached at the University of Arizona from 1952 to 1956 and at New Mexico State University from 1958 to 1967. His 1960 team went 11–0. He was head coach at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas from 1972 to 1973 and later was consultant at New Mexico Highlands.
Woodson coached players who won the national rushing title nine times:
- Rudolph Mobley, Hardin–Simmons (1942, 1946)
- Wilton Davis, Hardin–Simmons (1947)
- Art Luppino, Arizona (1954, 1955)
- Pervis Atkins, New Mexico State (1959)
- Bob Gaiters, New Mexico (State 1960)
- Jim Pilot, New Mexico State (1961, 1962)
Death
Woodson died of colon cancer on February 22, 1998, at his home in Dallas, Texas.[1]
Head coaching record
| Year
|
Team
|
Overall
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Conference |
Standing
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Bowl/playoffs
|
Coaches#
|
AP°
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| Arkansas State Teachers Bears (Arkansas Intercollegiate Conference) (1935–1940)
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| 1935
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Arkansas State Teachers
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4–3 |
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| 1936
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Arkansas State Teachers
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8–0 |
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1st |
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| 1937
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Arkansas State Teachers
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8–1 |
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1st |
L Charity |
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| 1938
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Arkansas State Teachers
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7–1 |
|
1st |
|
|
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| 1939
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Arkansas State Teachers
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5–2–2 |
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| 1940
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Arkansas State Teachers
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8–1–1 |
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1st |
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| Arkansas State Teachers:
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40–8–3 |
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| Hardin–Simmons Cowboys (Border Conference) (1941–1951)
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| 1941
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Hardin–Simmons
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7–3–1 |
3–1 |
4th |
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| 1942
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Hardin–Simmons
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9–0–1[n 1] |
4–0–1 |
T–1st |
Sun[n 1] |
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| 1943
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No team—World War II
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| 1944
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No team—World War II
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| 1945
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No team—World War II
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| 1946
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Hardin–Simmons
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11–0 |
6–0 |
1st |
W Alamo |
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| 1947
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Hardin–Simmons
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8–3 |
5–1 |
2nd |
W Harbor |
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| 1948
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Hardin–Simmons
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6–2–3 |
3–2–1 |
5th |
T Grape, W Shrine, W Camellia |
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| 1949
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Hardin–Simmons
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6–4–1 |
4–2 |
T–3rd |
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| 1950
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Hardin–Simmons
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5–5 |
3–3 |
5th |
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| 1951
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Hardin–Simmons
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6–6 |
4–1 |
T–2nd |
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| Hardin–Simmons:
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57–23–6 |
32–10–2 |
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| Arizona Wildcats (Border Conference) (1952–1956)
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| 1952
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Arizona
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6–4 |
3–2 |
3rd |
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| 1953
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Arizona
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4–5–1 |
3–2 |
4th |
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| 1954
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Arizona
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7–3 |
3–2 |
4th |
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| 1955
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Arizona
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5–4–1 |
1–2–1 |
5th |
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| 1956
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Arizona
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4–6 |
1–2 |
4th |
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| Arizona:
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26–22–2 |
11–10–1 |
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| New Mexico A&M / New Mexico State Aggies (Border Conference) (1958–1961)
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| 1958
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New Mexico A&M
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4–6 |
1–3 |
4th |
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| 1959
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New Mexico A&M
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8–3 |
2–2 |
T–3rd |
W Sun |
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| 1960
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New Mexico State
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11–0 |
4–0 |
1st |
W Sun |
19 |
17
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| 1961
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New Mexico State
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5–4–1 |
2–1 |
3rd |
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| New Mexico State Aggies (Independent) (1962–1967)
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| 1962
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New Mexico State
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4–6 |
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| 1963
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New Mexico State
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3–6–1 |
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| 1964
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New Mexico State
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6–4 |
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| 1965
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New Mexico State
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8–2 |
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| 1966
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New Mexico State
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7–3 |
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| 1967
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New Mexico State
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7–2–1 |
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| New Mexico State:
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63–36–3 |
9–6 |
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| Trinity Tigers (NCAA College Division / Division II independent) (1972–1973)
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| 1972
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Trinity
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8–2 |
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| 1973
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Trinity
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8–3 |
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| Trinity:
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16–5 |
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| Total: |
203–94–14 |
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| National championship Conference title Conference division title or championship game berth
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- #Rankings from final Coaches Poll.
- °Rankings from final AP Poll.
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See also
- List of college football career coaching wins leaders
Notes
- ^ a b Woodson went into service in the United States Navy at the end of the regular season. Clark Jarnagin served as interim head coach for the 1943 Sun Bowl.
References
External links
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- Oscar D. Longstreth (1908)
- William Olan Wilson (1909–1910)
- Robert L. Nixon (1911–1912)
- Orlando W. Stephenson (1913)
- James C. Cook (1914)
- Dan Estes (1915–1916)
- Keith Holloway (1917)
- No team (1918)
- Dan Estes (1919–1932)
- Jerry Dalrymple (1933–1934)
- Warren B. Woodson (1935–1940)
- Loyd Roberts (1941)
- No team (1942–1944)
- Charles McGibbony (1945–1946)
- Howard Montgomery (1947–1951)
- Jim Crafton (1952–1954)
- Frank Koon (1955–1964)
- Raymond Bright (1965–1971)
- Ken Stephens (1972–1981)
- Harold Horton (1982–1989)
- Mike Isom (1990–1999)
- Clint Conque (2000–2013)
- Steve Campbell (2014–2017)
- Nathan Brown (2018– )
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Central Arkansas Bears head basketball coaches |
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- Dan Estes (1920–1929)
- Orion Wray (1929–1934)
- Jerry Dalrymple (1934–1935)
- Warren B. Woodson (1935–1941)
- Loyd Roberts (1941–1942)
- No team (1942–1944)
- Harold Eldson & Sam Hindsman (1944–1945)
- Charles McGibbony (1945–1946)
- Sam Hindsman (1946–1947)
- Glen Smith (1947–1948)
- Howard Montgomery (1948–1949)
- Cecil Garrison (1949–1958)
- Cliff Horton (1958–1969)
- Marvin Bishop # (1969–1970)
- Cliff Horton (1970–1973)
- Don Nixon (1973–1979)
- Don Dyer (1979–1993)
- Arch Jones (1993–1999)
- Charles Hervey (1999–2003)
- David James # (2003)
- Rand Chappell (2003–2010)
- Corliss Williamson (2010–2013)
- Clarence Finley # (2013–2014)
- Russ Pennell (2014–2020)
- Anthony Boone (2020–2024)
- John Shulman (2024– )
# denotes interim head coach
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- J. C. Cook (1969–1971)
- Dan Estes (1916–1917)
- No team (1918)
- Dan Estes (1919–1933)
- H. L. Minton (1934)
- Dan Estes (1935)
- Warren B. Woodson (1936)
- Dan Estes (1937)
- No team (1938–1945)
- Jeff Farris (1946)
- E. T. Williams (1947)
- Jeff Farris (1948–1952)
- Paul Coleman (1953–1955)
- Fletcher Lowry (1956–1965)
- Cliff Horton (1966)
- Fletcher Lowry (1967–1970)
- Rex Lovell (1971–1981)
- Ronnie Kerr (1982–1985)
- Jack Fulmer (1986–1995)
- Toby White (1996–2001)
- Willie Gawlik (2002)
- Doug Clark (2003–2010)
- Allen Gum (2011–2021)
- Nick Harlan (2022– )
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- Carl Krause (1897–1898)
- No team (1899–1903)
- Dallas Scarbrough (1904–1907)
- George W. Mullins (1908–1909)
- No team (1910–1916)
- Hubert D. Martin (1917–1918)
- Katy Easterday (1919–1920)
- Arthur Bell Hays (1921–1923)
- P. E. Shotwell (1924–1925)
- Victor Payne (1926)
- Frank Bridges (1927–1929)
- Les Cranfill (1930–1934)
- Frank Kimbrough (1935–1940)
- Warren B. Woodson (1941–1942)
- Clark Jarnagin # (1942)
- No team (1943–1945)
- Warren B. Woodson (1946–1951)
- Murray Evans (1952–1954)
- Sammy Baugh (1955–1959)
- Howard McChesney (1960–1961)
- Jack Thomas (1962)
- Floyd Huggins (1963)
- No team (1964–1989)
- Jimmie Keeling (1990–2010)
- Jesse Burleson (2011– )
# denotes interim head coach
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Hardin–Simmons Cowboys head basketball coaches |
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- Hubert D. Martin (1907–1916)
- Roy Bradley (1916–1917)
- Unknown (1917–1920)
- Katy Easterday (1920–1921)
- Arthur Bell Hays (1921–1924)
- Unknown (1924–1927)
- Frank Bridges (1927–1929)
- Unknown (1929–1930)
- Les Cranfill (1930–1934)
- Unknown (1934–1936)
- Frank Kimbrough (1936–1941)
- Unknown (1941–1942)
- Clark Jarnagin (1942–1943)
- No team (1944–1945)
- Warren B. Woodson (1944–1945)
- Wes Bradshaw (1945–1947)
- Jack Martin (1948–1951)
- Bill Scott (1951–1962)
- Lou Henson (1962–1966)
- Paul Lambert (1966–1970)
- Glen Whitis (1970–1972)
- Russell Berry (1972–1975)
- Preston Vice (1975–1977)
- Jim Shuler (1977–1981)
- Jim Hatfield (1981–1983)
- Dick Danford (1983–1988)
- Dennis Harp (1988–2001)
- Dylan Howard (2001–2008)
- Craig Carse (2008–2017)
- Matt Brackett (2017– )
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- Stuart Forbes (1899)
- William W. Skinner (1900–1901)
- Leslie Gillett (1902)
- Orin A. Kates (1904)
- William M. Ruthrauff (1905)
- No team (1906–1907)
- H. B. Galbraith (1908–1909)
- Frank Shipp (1910–1911)
- Raymond L. Quigley (1912)
- Frank A. King (1913)
- Pop McKale (1914–1930)
- Fred Enke (1931)
- August W. Farwick (1932)
- Tex Oliver (1933–1937)
- Orian Landreth (1938)
- Mike Casteel (1939–1948)
- Bob Winslow (1949–1951)
- Warren B. Woodson (1952–1956)
- Ed Doherty (1957–1958)
- Jim LaRue (1959–1966)
- Darrell Mudra (1967–1968)
- Bob Weber (1969–1972)
- Jim Young (1973–1976)
- Tony Mason (1977–1979)
- Larry Smith (1980–1986)
- Dick Tomey (1987–2000)
- John Mackovic (2001–2003)
- Mike Hankwitz # (2003)
- Mike Stoops (2004–2011)
- Tim Kish # (2011)
- Rich Rodriguez (2012–2017)
- Kevin Sumlin (2018–2020)
- Jedd Fisch (2021–2023)
- Brent Brennan (2024– )
# denotes interim head coach
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New Mexico State Aggies athletic directors |
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- B. P. Fleming (1902–1908)
- John O. Miller (1910–1911)
- Art Badenoch (1911–1914)
- Clarence W. Russell (1914–1918)
- John G. Griffith (1918–1921)
- Dutch Bergman (1921–1923)
- R. R. Brown (1923–1927)
- Ted Coffman (1927–1929)
- Jerry Hines (1929–1940)
- Kermit Laabs (1940–1946)
- Jerry Hines (1946–1947)
- Raymond A. Curfman (1947–1949)
- Vaughn Corley (1949–1951)
- George McCarty (1951–1953)
- Presley Askew (1953–1958)
- Warren B. Woodson (1958–1967)
- Lou Henson (1967–1975)
- Keith Colson (1975–1986)
- Al Gonzales (1986–1997)
- Jim Paul (1997–1999)
- Brian Faison (1999–2004)
- McKinley Boston (2004–2014)
- Mario Moccia (2015–2025)
- Amber Burdge # (2025– )
# denotes interim athletic director
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- William M. Clute (1893)
- No team (1894)
- Alfred Holt (1895)
- No coach (1896)
- Charles M. Barber (1897–1898)
- John O. Miller (1899)
- William A. Sutherland (1900)
- John O. Miller (1901–1907)
- William G. Hummell (1908)
- John H. Squires (1909)
- Art Badenoch (1910–1913)
- Clarence W. Russell (1914–1916)
- John G. Griffith (1917)
- No team (1918)
- Anthony Savage (1919)
- Dutch Bergman (1920–1922)
- R. R. Brown (1923–1925)
- Arthur Burkholder (1926)
- Ted Coffman (1927–1928)
- Jerry Hines (1929–1939)
- Julius H. Johnston (1940–1942)
- Maurice Moulder (1943)
- No team (1944–1945)
- Raymond A. Curfman (1946–1947)
- Vaughn Corley (1948–1950)
- Joseph T. Coleman (1951–1952)
- James Patton (1953–1954)
- Tony Cavallo (1955–1957)
- Warren B. Woodson (1958–1967)
- Jim Wood (1968–1972)
- Jim Bradley (1973–1977)
- Gil Krueger (1978–1982)
- Fred Zechman (1983–1985)
- Mike Knoll (1986–1989)
- Jim Hess (1990–1996)
- Tony Samuel (1997–2004)
- Hal Mumme (2005–2008)
- DeWayne Walker (2009–2012)
- Doug Martin (2013–2021)
- Jerry Kill (2022–2023)
- Tony Sanchez (2024– )
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- Unknown (1900–1901)
- J. B. Choate (1902)
- Unknown (1903–1905)
- No team (1906)
- Unknown (1907)
- Jim Simmons (1908)
- Edward A. Werner (1909–1910)
- George H. Pritchard (1911)
- Arthur H. Day (1912)
- Luther Burleson (1913)
- Edward A. Werner (1914)
- Stanley A. Boles (1915)
- Jeff Bivens (1916–1917)
- Luther Burleson (1918)
- Dale Morrison (1919)
- James Howard Goodman (1920–1922)
- A. J. Robinson (1923–1924)
- Barry Holton (1925–1928)
- Logan Stollenwerck (1929–1931)
- Leland Wilkins (1932–1936)
- Alvah Boggs (1937–1940)
- Doug Cooke (1941)
- No team (1942–1945)
- Bob Coe (1946–1947)
- Jack Sanders (1947–1948)
- Bill James (1949–1951)
- William A. McElreath (1952–1961)
- W. C. McElhannon (1962–1965)
- Wilson Waites (1966)
- Earl Gartman (1967–1969)
- Gene Offield (1970–1971)
- Warren B. Woodson (1972–1973)
- Gene Norris (1974–1989)
- Steve Mohr (1990–2013)
- Jerheme Urban (2014– )
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AFCA NCAA College Division/Division II Coach of the Year winners |
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- 1960: Woodson
- 1961: Gaither
- 1962: Edwards
- 1963: Edwards
- 1964: Stasavich
- 1965: Curtice
- 1966: Jessee
- 1967: S. Moore
- 1968: Root
- 1969: Naviaux
- 1970: Ellender
- 1971: Raymond
- 1972: Raymond
- 1973: Maurer
- 1974: Kramer
- 1975: Maurer
- 1976: Dennison
- 1977: Manlove
- 1978: Tressel
- 1979: Narduzzi
- 1980: Carter
- 1981: Ragazzo
- 1982: Wacker
- 1983: Morton
- 1984: Gailey
- 1985: Landis
- 1986: Solomonson
- 1987: Rhoades
- 1988: Hager
- 1989: Williams
- 1990: Hager
- 1991: Broyles
- 1992: Burgess
- 1993: Wallace
- 1994: Wallace
- 1995: Wallace
- 1996: Glenn
- 1997: Glenn
- 1998: Tjeerdsma
- 1999: Tjeerdsma
- 2000: Hale
- 2001: Lennon
- 2002: Kelly
- 2003: Kelly & Van Diest
- 2004: Hatcher
- 2005: Martin
- 2006: Martin
- 2007: Dean
- 2008: Tjeerdsma
- 2009: Tjeerdsma
- 2010: Nielson
- 2011: Winters
- 2012: Dean
- 2013: Dorrel
- 2014: Wristen
- 2015: Dorrel
- 2016: Dorrel
- 2017: Shinnick
- 2018: Cronic
- 2019: Hoffner
- 2020: No season
- 2021: Wilson
- 2022: B. Moore
- 2023: Simmons
- 2024: Jackson
- 2025: Clements
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